US Curriculum Alignment
CCSS SL.K.5, NGSS 1-ESS1-1, NGSS 5-ESS1-1
Planet Poster – Neptune
A clean Neptune poster on a neutral background, focused on its size, color, and surface.
- Instant digital download after checkout
- Print at home, as many times as you like
- High-resolution PDF — ready for A4 & US Letter
- Formats
- A2, A3, A4, Arch-C, Tabloid, US Letter
- Type
- Planet Poster
Neptune is the eighth and most distant planet from the Sun, an ice giant known for its deep blue color and the fastest winds in the Solar System, reaching over 1,200 miles per hour. This poster showcases its striking blue atmosphere and storm bands.
This printable Montessori-style poster is an instant digital download for science learning at home or in the classroom. Print it in any included size to teach how Neptune's methane-rich atmosphere gives it its vivid color.
No invented anatomy.
No blurred or fused details.
The same hand-drawn look across the whole collection — verified against the real species, animal by animal.
“The closer you look, the more it should hold up.”
Every animal is reviewed against real species references before it becomes part of a product. We check the body structure, proportions, joints, feet, paws, hooves, beaks, horns, tails and species-specific markings.
Where toes and claws are visible, their number and arrangement match the real animal. There are no fused paws, missing limbs, unexplained extra toes or shapes that fall apart when you look more closely.
The illustration remains soft and hand-drawn, but the anatomy underneath it must make sense.
Often
asked.
Neptune is the eighth and most distant planet from the Sun, classified as an ice giant alongside Uranus because its interior is dominated by water, ammonia, and methane ices rather than mostly hydrogen and helium gas. It is the fourth-largest planet by diameter, at about 49,244 km across, roughly four times Earth's width.
Neptune orbits at an average distance of about 4.5 billion km from the Sun, taking roughly 165 Earth years to complete one orbit. Since its discovery in 1846, it has only completed one full orbit as of 2011.
Neptune's atmosphere is mostly hydrogen and helium with a small amount of methane, which absorbs red light and gives the planet its vivid blue color. Beneath the atmosphere lies a hot, dense mantle of water, ammonia, and methane ices surrounding a rocky core.


